After news on the weekend that disaffected Country Liberal Party (CLP) MLAs Alison Anderson, Larisa Lee and Francis Xavier Kurrupuwu had decided to join his party, Mr Palmer on Monday revealed other NT politicians may soon jump ship.

"I am confident that in the next month or so that they will have the courage to stand up for their communities and to join our party," Mr Palmer told the ABC.

He said it was not just CLP politicians who had contacted him, but also other people who worked in that party.

Mr Palmer refused to say which other politicians he had been in discussion with, but said that talks were continuing.

The CLP has had a tumultuous few months in the NT after Ms Anderson, Ms Lee and Mr Kurrupuwu quit the party.

They claimed they had been victims of racism from within the CLP and that the party was not working hard enough to help people in rural areas and moved to sit on the cross benches.

The latest manouverings mean the CLP now holds 13 seats in the 25-seat NT Parliament, Labor holds eight, there are three PUP members and one Independent.

NT Chief Minister Adam Giles denied any more of his team were likely to defect to Mr Palmer's party.

He hinted that Labor Party MP Ken Vowles may have been considering leaving the ALP to join PUP.

But Mr Vowles was quick to deny he would join with Clive Palmer.

"We might share the same shirt size, but that is about as far as we get with each other and there is nothing else," Mr Vowles said.

Mr Palmer also revealed details of how the rebel MPs came to join PUP, saying they approached him on Friday and were flown to Queensland for a meeting where it was agreed they would represent his party.

The billionaire denied that part of any deal was that he would fund the legal costs for Ms Lee, who has reportedly been charged with aggravated assault following a recent altercation in Katherine.

Ms Anderson, who Mr Giles has previously accused of trying to hold a gun to the head of the NT government, has now been a member of parliament representing at different times Labor, the CLP, PUP, and as an Independent.

Mr Palmer said Ms Anderson would become the leader of the PUP in the NT.